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@Frederik_Borgesius I think what's so bad about "lie detectors" is how officials keep trying to convince themselves that it "might be useful" and keep finding excuses to work them into situations where they might be really bad for someone's rights.

Olives boosted

cnbc.com/2024/02/01/mastercard I guess you can expect more legitimate transactions to be inexplicably rejected because of their "state of the art" "AI" engine.

Olives boosted

I remember criticism of the bland outfits in this game.

Meccha Japan  
Kotobukiya revealed the colored prototype of Florian with Fuecoco figure✨ What do you think?
Olives boosted

petapixel.com/2023/06/05/museu

"An Italian museum has won a lawsuit against a magazine publisher which used a photo of Michelangelo’s sculpture David without permission — despite the 500-year-old artwork belonging in the public domain."

"A related law enables the country’s public institutions, such as museums, to request concession fees for commercial reproductions of artworks of cultural heritage, regardless of their status."

Olives boosted

@fabiscafe I think this sort of highly algorithmic thing is the sort of thing which people hate about mainstream social media.

From what I remember, Sandstorm is a content management system which relies on installing little "apps" which run in it (which are typically pre-existing programs made by other people, but really stripped down, so worse), and these are hardly ever updated.

There, you have it, Sandstorm. A novelty project.

When the developer describes it, he makes it sound like some futuristic thing, but it is really just bad.

Surprising that someone would actually use it.

Olives  
https://capnproto.org Whenever I see someone using Sandstorm, I remember this (developed by the same guy, lol). Don't use Sandstorm though, it's ba...

capnproto.org Whenever I see someone using Sandstorm, I remember this (developed by the same guy, lol). Don't use Sandstorm though, it's bad, lol.

Olives boosted

@freemo I see someone likes to "live dangerously" (wouldn't recommend).

Olives boosted
Olives boosted
Olives boosted

@teggy While it might have it's uses, I don't think it can compete with search engines. The inexplicably bad results are probably going to get pretty annoying.

reason.com/2024/02/02/houston-

"For months, Houston police have been citing and arresting local volunteers for the radical act of feeding the needy. Now the city is facing a lawsuit alleging that its crackdown on charitable giving violates the First Amendment."

"Randy Hiroshige, a Texas Civil Rights Project attorney, says the issue isn't just about handing out sandwiches; it's about the government trying to suppress political speech.

"They're a protest group," Hiroshige says of Food Not Bombs. "They want to be visible, and the reason they conduct their food sharing is to show the public what it looks like when a community looks out for each other's needs and really provides mutual aid to one another.""

"Similar cases have popped up elsewhere. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit ruled in 2018 that distributing food was "expressive conduct" protected under the . That decision was a response to a lawsuit by the Food Not Bombs chapter in Fort Lauderdale."

hindustantimes.com/cities/pune

Another way in which people with "conservative values" (i.e. "we hate porn") end up running apologetics for abusers (maybe not deliberately). Chances are he lives in a dysfunctional household (the parent certainly seems problematic enough). Also, even a framing of "he probably had a mental disability", and "the parent didn't really want to deal with that", would honestly be more likely than taking his arguments here at face value.

Also, slowly plotting and poisoning someone to death? I'm not really buying "heat of the moment".

Those are my thoughts though, if you have others, then I'd be interested to know.

eff.org/deeplinks/2024/02/what

"Proposition E is a “kitchen sink" approach to public safety that capitalizes on residents’ fear of crime in an attempt to gut common-sense democratic oversight of the San Francisco Police Department (SFPD). In addition to removing certain police oversight authority from the Police Commission and expanding the circumstances under which police may conduct high-speed vehicle chases, Proposition E would also amend existing laws passed in 2019 to protect San Franciscans from invasive, untested, or biased police technologies.

Currently, if police want to acquire a new technology, they have to go through a procedure known as CCOPS—Community Control Over Police Surveillance. This means that police need to explain why they need a new piece of technology and provide a detailed use policy to the democratically-elected Board of Supervisors, who then vote on it. The process also allows for public comment so people can voice their support for, concerns about, or opposition to the new technology. This process is in no way designed to universally deny police new technologies. Instead, it ensures that when police want new technology that may have significant impacts on communities, those voices have an opportunity to be heard and considered. San Francisco police have used this procedure to get new technological capabilities as recently as Fall 2022 in a way that stimulated discussion, garnered community involvement and opposition (including from EFF), and still passed."

If someone's "solution" to someone putting something in their body (War on Drugs) which they reckon is potentially harmful is just having a cop bust down their door, shoot their dog, beat them up, and haul them into a cell where there is a good chance they'll be beaten, raped, or commit suicide (whether in the cell, even after they leave, there may be an increased chance), then maybe there is a very big problem with that "solution" indeed.

Also, tearing apart families (for however long someone is locked up for), which isn't good for their children's mental health or life prospects.

Locking people up is not a magic solution to social issues.

@caseynewton I'm looking at one of the links there.

Notice they've (vague they) engaged in the same "AI" (it's not intelligent) fearmongering for over a year (every month, or more frequently, where someone acts as if the "end is suddenly here") with a flimsy argument (relying a lot on "saving the children"[1]), it seems presumptions, and contradictions in what they say (i.e. trying to play up the practical significance, and being caught out for instance, saying it's fairly easy to handle these in a report hardly anyone reads).

It also puts a large emphasis on content (here, even lumping in non-existent people, which is problematic), rather than conduct (i.e. harassment), which tends to be what issues primarily involve. Repeating that people are not typically evil for the sake of being evil, and it seems that criminals already have a grounds to be punished over. It also seems rather confused, often talking in a "War on Drugs" type fashion, with this impossible mentality that censorship can magically solve the world's problems (rather than the more likely scenario of creating problems), one which tends to distract from better ideas. It feels rather one dimensional. It also uniquely elevates the opinions of people who only seem to know how to arrest people[2] of what to do.

Though, it (briefly) uses the term "realistic" (which I suppose is better), language like this is actually fairly fuzzy (and has been misused in the past). There is a saying there is no such thing as "realistic" as well. But, in any case, it still has a hard time escaping from these same "War on Drugs" type dynamics.

Perhaps, one parallel issue which comes to mind is the case of *that* (adult) "celebrity deepfake", but then, that is comparing apples to oranges... (and maybe, a group of internet trolls, or that is what was conveyed to me, is harassing...?) It is also probably one which would be impossible without a so-called "one stop shop"[3], and perhaps, the unique factors around Twitter's management. It's hard to look at that particular case, and to presume the same dynamics here (it's also hard to imagine it would make a practical difference with Twitter).

Also, [4] still applies.

1 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Think_of

2 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_t

3 qoto.org/@olives/1118327747305

4 qoto.org/@olives/1111915432366

Interesting to see an old school style witch anime.

The Fandom Post  
‘Mary and the Witch’s Flower’ #Anime Returns To #Netflix http://dlvr.it/T2FDkK
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